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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Tenchusatsu who wrote (362851)12/14/2007 8:25:51 PM
From: bentway  Respond to of 1576617
 
Huckabee Sees WH 'Bunker Mentality'

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Filed at 7:49 p.m. ET

CONCORD, N.H. (AP) -- Mike Huckabee, who has joked about his lack of foreign policy experience, is criticizing the Bush administration's efforts, denouncing a go-it-alone ''arrogant bunker mentality'' and questioning decisions on Iraq.

Huckabee, the former Arkansas governor now running for the Republican presidential nomination, lays out a policy plan that is long on optimism but short on details in the January-February issue of the journal Foreign Affairs, which is published by the Council on Foreign Relations. A copy of his article was released Friday.

''American foreign policy needs to change its tone and attitude, open up, and reach out,'' Huckabee said. ''The Bush administration's arrogant bunker mentality has been counterproductive at home and abroad. My administration will recognize that the United States' main fight today does not pit us against the world but pits the world against the terrorists.''

In one specific criticism, Huckabee said Bush did not send enough troops to invade Iraq. And he accused the president of marginalizing Gen. Eric Shinseki, the Army chief of staff, who said at the outset of the war that it might take several hundred thousand U.S. troops to control Iraq after the invasion. ''I would have met with Shinseki privately and carefully weighed his advice,'' Huckabee said.

He said this year's troop increase under Bush has resulted in significant but tenuous gains, and he said -- much as Bush has -- that he would not withdraw troops from Iraq any faster than Gen. David Petraeus, the top U.S. commander there, recommends. The military has now slowly begun to reverse the troop increase.

Huckabee has previously joked about his lack of experience in international affairs. ''I may not be the expert as some people on foreign policy, but I did stay at a Holiday Inn Express last night,'' he said earlier this month.

While the Foreign Affairs article is missing the one-liners he is known for, it does have a few folksy comparisons to illustrate his points. On Iran, for example, he makes a case for diplomacy by saying, ''Before we put boots on the ground elsewhere, we had better have wingtips there first.''

He adds that the U.S. can exploit the Iranian government's hunger for regional clout, saying, ''We cannot live with al-Qaida, but we might be able to live with a contained Iran.''

Last week, Huckabee missed a report the White House released saying Iran had halted its nuclear weapons program; one day later, the candidate said he was unaware of the report and had been campaigning too hard to read the newspaper or be briefed. The Foreign Affairs article seems to have been written before the report was released, citing ''urgent concerns about Iran's development of nuclear weapons.''

In his article, Huckabee also thumped Bush for failing to pursue al-Qaida in Pakistan, noting recent terrorism plans, since thwarted, that were planned there: ''Whereas our failure to tackle Iran seems to be leading inexorably to our attacking it, our failure to tackle al-Qaida in Pakistan seems to be leading inexorably to its attacking us again.''

Earlier Friday, on another topic in Boscawen, N.H., Huckabee said eliminating federal income taxes in favor of a national sales tax would help save Social Security -- an odd pitch in a state where residents pay no state income or sales taxes.

''Instead of basing our national budget off of payroll taxes for Social Security ... it means the base of funding is much broader,'' said Huckabee, whose shoestring campaign has surged nationally and in Iowa, which holds caucuses five days before New Hampshire's Jan. 8 primary.

The tax plan Huckabee has proposed, called the ''FAIR tax,'' would eliminate federal income and investment taxes and replace them with a 23 percent federal sales tax. Even the backers of the tax admit it is unlikely to get through Congress, and other leading GOP candidates have been critical of the idea.

It's a tough sell in New Hampshire, where residents do not pay state income taxes or general sales taxes. Scott Sweezey, a programmer at the plant where Huckabee spoke, said he doesn't know how to make a consumption tax treat people fairly.

''Low-income or retired would pay the same tax as somebody who has a million dollars,'' said Sweezey, an independent. ''I guess if you don't buy anything, you don't pay any sales tax, but if you do buy something, you pay sales tax.''

Separately, Huckabee also named Republican political strategist Ed Rollins as his national campaign chairman. Rollins was national campaign director for Ronald Reagan in the 1984 presidential election.

Copyright 2007 The Associated Press



To: Tenchusatsu who wrote (362851)12/14/2007 10:14:00 PM
From: bentway  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1576617
 
Schwarzenegger Will 'Declare Fiscal Emergency' In Weeks

POSTED: 2:06 pm PST December 14, 2007
UPDATED: 2:47 pm PST December 14, 2007
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger said Friday he will declare a "fiscal emergency" in January to give him and the Legislature more power to deal with the state's growing deficit.

Schwarzenegger made the announcement Friday after meeting with lawmakers and interest groups this week to tell them California's budget deficit is worse -- far worse -- than economists predicted just a few weeks ago.

The shortfall is not $10 billion, but more than $14 billion -- a 40 percent jump that would put it in orbit with some of the state's worst fiscal crisis, those who have met with him said.

A fiscal emergency would trigger a special session and force lawmakers and the governor to begin addressing the shortfall within 45 days.

"What we have to do is fix the budget system. The system itself needs to be fixed, and I think that this is a good year, this coming year, to fix it," Schwarzenegger said in Long Beach, where he was promoting his plan for health care reform.

California is struggling with shrinking state tax revenue from the meltdown of the subprime housing market and the credit crunch on Wall Street.

State spending also has increased by more than 40 percent since Schwarzenegger took office after the 2003 recall of then-Gov. Gray Davis.

Schwarzenegger in August signed a $145.5 billion budget that increased spending 11 percent due largely to the increased cost of bond repayments and special funds. General fund spending for day-to-day operations increased less than 1 percent, from $101.7 to $102.3 billion for the budget year that began July 1.

In August, Schwarzenegger's office projected the state would end its current budget year with a $4.1 billion reserve. Last month, the state's nonpartisan legislative analyst reported that the state would instead end the year in the red, and was on pace to rack up a staggering $10 billion deficit over the next 18 months.

Schwarzenegger and his top aides this week have privately told lawmakers and interest groups that the gap could top $14 billion and warned cities, counties and health and welfare agencies to expect cuts.

Last month, Schwarzenegger ordered agency leaders to draft plans for across-the-board cut as high as 10 percent.

State lawmakers have been criticized in recent weeks for pushing through a raise for themselves, despite the state's fiscal troubles.



To: Tenchusatsu who wrote (362851)12/15/2007 12:41:43 AM
From: TimF  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1576617
 
blogs.indystar.com



To: Tenchusatsu who wrote (362851)12/15/2007 7:49:36 AM
From: steve harris  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1576617
 
lol

the neoMarxists jumped all over that opportunity to tell us how beneficial govt control of the private sector is.



To: Tenchusatsu who wrote (362851)12/15/2007 8:22:42 AM
From: Road Walker  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1576617
 
So tell us, what government spending program helped jump-start the economy?

"Jump start" are not my words. But yes all those things are increased economic activity at "zero cost" because they are on your governments credit card. They all produce increased manufacturing, jobs, transportation; all the stuff that makes an economy hum.